Reading history

As long as you have access to web, an idea of what & where to look, you can educate yourself very well in these times.


Aakar Patel September 07, 2013
The writer is a columnist. He is also a former editor of the Mumbai-based English newspaper Mid Day and the Gujarati paper Divya Bhaskar aakar.patel@tribune.com.pk

We live in good times and for this we must be grateful. I am constantly reminded of this as I look for books that were first printed in the centuries before us. I was reading through the Mughal histories some time ago. Now fortunately, India has a few publishers who reprint the primary texts of ancient, medieval and early modern India. And so, there was access to Humayun Nama, the biography of Humayun by his sister Gulbadan Begum, the Tuzuk of Jahangir and the Maasir-i-Alamgiri, a history of Aurangzeb. Most of these were from Low Price Publishers, which reprint books out of copyright. They have in four fat volumes, Abul Fazl’s volumes on Akbar, and in two, the record of the Mughal nobility, the Maasirul Umara. What I couldn’t find was the secret biography of Akbar by Badauni, part of his Muntakhab-ut-Tawarikh. It is a text that offers the conservative’s view of the heretical king’s reign as opposed to Abul Fazl’s flattering, liberal one. The book is out of print and not available anywhere, though I imagine a few universities will have it. I found it on the website of the Packard Humanities Institute, set up by one of Hewlett-Packard’s founders. Badauni’s writing is funny and, if you are able to look at it dispassionately, as interesting as Abul Fazl’s. Between these two writers, we get a full picture of Akbar and the way in which he was viewed at the time.

Unfortunately, this isn’t true of Shah Jahan, a most secretive man on whom there isn’t as much published. Perhaps, this was deliberate, given the bloody fashion in which he came to power, with the slaughter of all his brothers, and the grief he came to in the end under his son, who in turn, killed two of his brothers and forced the third to flee the country. But it is a shame.

Aurangzeb has been biographed by Sir Jadunath Sarkar but this four-volume work is not in print. Nor, to my knowledge, is it available on the internet. There is a concise single volume that is on the market, but it probably doesn’t have all the anecdotes. Who could have imagined that a young Aurangzeb fell so hard for a girl who was plucking mangoes that she could tempt him to drink? After Aurangzeb, the decline of the Mughals is well documented by Irvine’s two volumes, Sir Jadunath’s fine four-volume history, and by Grant-Duff’s volumes on the Marathas and James Tod’s three volumes on the Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan. All of these are available through cheap reprints.

Low Price Publishers (a good, honest name) also put out Max Mueller’s 50-volume Sacred Books of the East series and if one is interested in the primary texts of Theravada Buddhism and Jainism, it is a good source. The Theravada texts are also available online and in print elsewhere, of course, given the deep interest in Sri Lanka.

Then there are some great works that are only available online. For instance, the seven-volume history of Christianity in the Roman period by Ernest Renan, which begins with his magnificent biography of Jesus. Many of his works are available for free on Amazon’s Kindle store.

Renan is prejudiced against the Orient, against women and against Jews in particular, but he is a wonderful writer and should be read, because the sort of work he wrote is not written any longer. The reason is that few people write broad histories these days. The modern scholar is a creature of deep but narrow interest. The summation of a period no longer interests most serious historians.

Another writer whom we are fortunate to have available for free on the net is Theodor Mommsen, who wrote the five-volume history of Rome, which is no longer in print, at least in English.

Some of the finest work done in reissuing books that were printed long ago is by Penguin Black Classics, to my mind the best imprint in the world. From Homer and Herodotus to the Romans, the ancient Indians and the ancient Chinese, there are very few classic works that have not been reissued in this distinct black-spined series. In India, there is the additional benefit of having most of Penguin’s Black Classics series discounted. Books are as low priced as Rs250, though now with the rupee sinking that might change. But even if you have no budget at all, as long as you have access to the web and an idea of what and where to look, you can educate yourself very well in these times, and for that, as I said, we must be grateful.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2013.

Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.

COMMENTS (9)

M | 10 years ago | Reply

Aakar, If you wanted the history of British India specifically the last few decades you should have Michael Edwardes's "The Last Years of British India" (http://www.amazon.com/The-last-years-British-India/dp/B0007DMLDE) on your bookshelf. Edwardes, whose work includes lives of Robert Clive, Warren Hastings, and the Relief of Lucknow, was privy to many of the official meetings himself as well as conducted personal interviews of all the major players. The work is a remarkably prescient and impartial view of the concluding part of the British Empire.

syed wazir | 10 years ago | Reply

So informative article thanx for your work

VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ